The Ranch

Sometime in the Thirties, Emmett & Ida Louise Jackson (brother and sister) bought
a 1,280 acre (2 square mile) spread of land near Point Arena ("the old Hoffman
place"). They were neighbors to the Piper family, and
raised peacocks for feathers, which she sold, and managed a
sheep ranch. About that time they
logged the ranch, removing all of the large fir, pine, and redwoods. (there are dozens of large stumps remaining.) Now, after 70 years we have thick re-growth, but
the largest tree trunk is smaller than 7 feet across. We don't hear much
about Emmett, although he was said to have owned a few restaurants in Oakland as
well. All the neighbors knew Ida Louise, the ranch was always
referred to as "hers", but until we did our research, we never heard
of Emmett.

Ida Louise was the first black public school teacher in
California (We have done some research). We've heard she always
carried a .357 revolver when she went into town (which would be Boonville, Pt. Arena
and Manchester).
Perhaps she wasn't very trusting, and being black in the 30's and 40's, she
probably had reason not to be.

According to a newspaper article in the AVA (ava.com, dated
12/21/11 Hendy Woods Then and Now) "The singer that sang at the dedication
(7/7/63) was blues singer Ethel Waters famous for her rendition of Stormy
Weather. She was recruited by her personal friend Miss Ida Jackson" to the opening of Hendy Woods State
Park near Boonville for the inaugural ceremony. That must have been wonderful.
(Hendy Woods is a beautiful campground on the Navarro River, part of the
California state park system) We don't know what happened to Emmett, but Ida
sold the ranch in 1979, and went back to Oakland, and it seems died in 1996. The ranch was subdivided it into several parcels, the south side of the road is now
a 91-acre homestead, holding a vineyard and winery (Zinfandel, Syrah and Merlot, Mendocino
Ridge appellation). Buy a bottle of the very fine "Mariah"
label to sample
these grapes. Four other parcels are private
residences, our neighbors. By all accounts Ida was quite a woman, she
entertained frequently up at the ranch, we wish
we could have spoken with her before she died. She is certainly
welcome to stay-

"Stanley" bought this parcel before us, in about 1991. Stanley
tore down
the original house, and in 1994 built a Queen Anne Victorian-style home in its
place. He also improved the spring with a gas-powered pump to fill the
original water tower, and added a 300 Watt solar array. (see Utilities
for detail) Maybe he didn't much like living in the country, or perhaps
this was just an investment for him. For
whatever reason he headed back to the city after a very short time. We
heard that he and his wife lived there for a year, before they moved again to
the Santa Cruz mountains. He rented out the ranch as a vacation house from 1995-1996 and put it up for
sale in 1996. We saw an ad for the house in a real estate flyer, and
marked it for a visit during our 1996 (see Background
) visit, but never got that far south that year.

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Unless otherwise noted, all images in this page are the property of Paul & Mickie Grace.